IMPACT ON BARBADOS
PM Arthur rejects
bail-out plea from WICB
THE Barbados government has rejected out of hand a plea by
the West Indies Cricket Board (WICB) to allow it to use
Kensington Oval's World Cup (CWC) gate receipts to clear
some of its US$15 million debt.
"It would be an act
of irresponsible folly for us to take the only thing we
would get from the World Cup and give it to the West Indies
Cricket Board (WICB) to pay its debts," Prime Minister Owen
Arthur said on Monday night.
He urged WICB
president Ken Gordon and other officials of the
cricket-managing body to "pass over the gate receipts so
that we can start dealing with our financial matters at the
Oval".
Arthur made the
call while addressing Barbados Labor Party (BLP) faithfuls
at Christ Church Parish Centre attending the uncontested
nomination of minister of health Jerome Walcott, the sitting
Member of Parliament, as candidate for Christ Church South.
Arthur said
government had raised "a lot of money" to redevelop
Kensington Oval with the understanding that the Local
Organizing Committee (LOC) would get the gate receipts from
the matches played there.
However, he
disclosed that Gordon had written him, saying the board had
a US$15 million debt "and they want us to agree that we will
give them the gate receipts to pay their debts".
The prime minister
said: "Now I have already written him to say that the
Government of Barbados does not and will not agree …." He
said while he was sympathetic to the needs of the WICB and
wanted to see its debt problem addressed, the board should
hand over the gate receipts to the various countries that
hosted CWC games "so that they can start paying their debts
for building these stadiums".
Arthur also
dismissed what he said was a statement by Barbados Cricket
Association (BCA) president Tony Marshall that his group
owned Kensington Oval.
He said what the
BCA owned was the land at Kensington Oval. Government owned
90% of the property development company that had been set up
to develop Kensington, with the BCA owning the rest, Arthur
said. Government, having spent over $100 million to
redevelop the Oval, "shall not surrender our interest in
it", he declared. But he told the meeting: "We would like
the partnership to continue."
The prime minister
also announced that he had summoned a meeting with "all
concerned" to deal with the ownership issue as well as the
management of the Oval.
"What the
Government owns is ours and we have to put together a
company to jointly manage it and a company also has to be
put together to jointly own it and manage it, using a
partnership. (Cricinfo)